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Siding Cost · Oklahoma

Siding Cost in Oklahoma (2026)

Siding in Oklahoma typically runs $8,500–$18,000 for a typical 2,000 sq ft single-family home (approximately 2,000 sq ft of exterior wall surface). That works out to roughly $4.25–$8.99 per sq ft installed.

Residential home exterior showing horizontal lap siding patterns

Oklahoma context that moves siding replacement cost

Climate: Continental with hot summers, mild winters, and significant tornado risk. Part of Tornado Alley. Expansive clay soils are a major concern.

Labor market: Below national average.

Permits & codes: Oklahoma follows the IRC with state amendments. The state adopted the International Residential Code in 2010. Local enforcement varies. Oklahoma City and Tulsa have comprehensive building departments. Storm shelter requirements are increasingly common in new subdivisions.

About siding replacement in Oklahoma

Vinyl siding is the most common residential exterior in the US — about 30% of homes — because it's the cheapest durable option that doesn't require finish painting. A full replacement on a typical 2,000 sq ft home runs $9,000 to $19,000 nationally in 2026.

Fiber cement (Hardie board) is the next most common, costing 1.5–2× vinyl but offering a more upscale appearance and 50-year warranty. Wood, engineered wood (LP SmartSide), brick veneer, and stucco fill out the remaining options. Material choice and code requirements interact to drive the per-state spread.

What moves the price

Tear-off vs new construction

Replacing existing siding adds $1.50–$3.00/sq ft for removal and disposal. On a 2,000 sq ft house that's $3,000–$6,000 just to take the old material off. New construction over fresh sheathing is at the low end of the state range.

Insulated (foam-backed) vinyl

Standard vinyl runs $3–$5/sq ft material. Foam-backed insulated vinyl is $5–$8/sq ft and adds R-2 to R-4 of continuous insulation. Required in some Northeast and Northwest jurisdictions to meet energy code on replacement projects.

House wrap and trim

Code requires a weather-resistive barrier behind new siding. Tyvek HomeWrap or equivalent is $0.30–$0.60/sq ft. New aluminum or PVC trim around windows, doors, and corners adds $1,500–$3,500. Don't skip it — water intrusion at trim is the most common siding-related insurance claim.

Hurricane and wind zones

Florida, Gulf Coast, and Atlantic states require tighter nailing schedules (every 8" on center vs 16") and sometimes ring-shank or hurricane-rated nails. Some coastal counties require fiber cement or Hardie board instead of vinyl. Add 15–30% to your base cost in HVHZ and high-wind regions.

Profile and color choice

Most vinyl is double-4 or double-5 horizontal lap. Premium profiles (dutch lap, board-and-batten, scallop) add 15–35% in material. Darker colors (deep blue, charcoal, forest green) cost 10–20% more than light tans and whites because of color stabilizers.

Two-story vs single-story

A 2-story home of the same square footage as a single-story has roughly 1.4× the exterior wall area. Two-story labor is also higher because of scaffolding requirements — figure $1,500–$3,500 extra on a typical 2-story job vs the same footprint single-story.

Siding cost across Oklahoma metros

Within Oklahoma the spread between metros is usually 25–40% of the state midpoint. Major metros pay more than rural areas because of labor demand, permit complexity, and material delivery overhead.

  • Oklahoma City — typical home build $125–$290/sq ft range
  • Tulsa — typical home build $120–$280/sq ft range
  • Norman — typical home build $120–$275/sq ft range
  • Edmond — typical home build $135–$310/sq ft range

Frequently asked questions

How much does siding replacement cost in Oklahoma?
A vinyl siding replacement on a typical 2,000 sq ft Oklahoma home runs $8,500–$18,000 — roughly $4.25–$8.99 per sq ft installed. Upgrading to fiber cement runs 1.5–2× that range. The state range adjusts for Oklahoma labor rates and any wind-zone code premium that applies.
How long does vinyl siding last in Oklahoma?
25–40 years typically, depending on UV exposure and climate. Oklahoma's climate (Continental with hot summers, mild winters, and significant tornado risk) affects this — hot southern climates degrade vinyl faster than mild northern ones. Premium thicker (.044"+) siding lasts longer than entry-level (.040"). Manufacturer warranties run 30–50 years; in practice expect fading and minor warping starting around year 25–30.
Vinyl vs fiber cement in Oklahoma — which is better value?
Vinyl: cheaper, zero maintenance, decent durability, but looks plastic up close. Fiber cement: looks like real wood, paintable, fire-resistant, 50-year warranty, but needs repainting every 10–15 years. For Oklahoma's resale market, fiber cement returns better in higher-end neighborhoods; vinyl is competitive in mid-tier markets.
Can I install vinyl siding myself in Oklahoma?
Technically yes for a single-story rambler with no complex details. Realistically: not unless you have framing experience. The challenge isn't nailing panels — it's the J-channel, drip cap, kick-out flashing, and water management at every penetration. Bad install causes 5-figure water damage. The $4,000–$8,000 labor savings rarely justify the risk for non-pros.
Should I insulate the wall when re-siding?
Tear-off is the cheapest time to add continuous exterior insulation. Adding 1" of XPS foam between sheathing and new siding adds $1.50–$2.50/sq ft and bumps wall R-value by R-5. For older Oklahoma homes (pre-1980) with R-11 batts, that's a significant improvement. For newer homes already at R-19+, the ROI is weaker.

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Related

See the full 50-state siding replacement cost comparison to see how Oklahoma stacks up nationally.

For broader benchmarks across Oklahoma, see the cost to build a house in Oklahoma.

Other trade costs for Oklahoma: